Saturday, November 25, 2017

Under Trump US taxpayers are still slaves of George Soros. Our tax money is used to collude with Soros' intervention in Hungary government. US joins Soros and EU in genocide of nation states-Hungary Journal, Breitbart, Politico...("This is a complete misappropriation of taxpayer funds. This is the kind of stuff that will sink Trump. He has all these rogue agencies blatantly defying him and he apparently has no interest in stopping them"-commenter)

The obvious subtext to all of this is that the State
Department [US taxpayer] funding effort is intended to bolster anti-government and
opposition media. This suggests it is still pursuing Obama era,anti-conservative policy objectives internationally in defiance of
President Trump, who has praised Prime Minister Orbán — the first European leader to back him — as “strong and brave”.

The Hungarian leader has maintained a position of strong opposition
to “globalist elites, the bureaucrats who serve them, the politicians
in their pay, and the agents of the Soros-type networks that embody
their interests” despite fierce opposition from Brussels, pro-mass immigration NGOs, and left-liberal U.S. media, believing he is standing up for a “silent majority” of hard-pressed families across the West, who wish to preserve their Christian heritage and national identity.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade has summoned the U.S.
Chargé d‘Affaires, asking for an explanation, and told him that we
consider this a political intervention by the U.S. Department of State
ahead of the elections,” a spokesman added.

The Hungarians have also robustly rejected the State Department’s accusations that there is no press freedom in their country.

For example, Prime Minister Orbán’s Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy, Dr. Zoltán Kovács, has highlighted the following exchange between journalists at Hungarian outlets 168óra
and RTL Klub — neither of which “would ever be described as linked to
the Orbán Government”, in his estimation:

168óra: Is there press freedom in Hungary?

Péter Kolosi: There is. If there weren’t, then there wouldn’t be an RTL Klub either.

Dr. Kovács then questioned whether Kostelancik — who is not the U.S.
ambassador to Hungary, but only fulfilling that role temporarily while
the Obama appointeehe formerly servedis in the process of being
replaced — has any mandate to be attacking Hungary’s media landscape in
the first place.

He also took the Chargé d‘Affaires to task for praising journalists of the “Communist old guard” who attended his speech for
supposedly “striving to speak the truth” — a scene the Hungarian
described as “stomach-turning”, given their history of collaboration
with the Soviet-backed dictatorship.

Prime Minister Orbán, who opposed the Leftist regime at some personal risk as a younger man, has often chided
Western leaders — and the European Union in particular — of “making
excuses for the crimes of Communism”, and worked to make sure its
victims are given due attention since his election.

Dr Kovács went on the publish a moreextensive response
to Kostelancik and the State Department, in which he lamented their
actions as “astonishing and disappointingcoming from an ally”.

Beyond the “clear interference in the domestic affairs of an ally”,
he noted that “the media in the U.S. has its own issues. Criticisms
related to concentration of media ownership, commercial relationships,
and mainstream media bias – Harvey Weinstein, anyone? — are now the
stuff of everyday in the U.S.”

The Hungarian premier believes that this process of undermining nation-states, revealed
as a globalist imperative by United Nations migration chief Peter
Sutherland in 2012, ["EU should "do its best to undermine" the "homogeneity" of its member
states, the UN's special representative for migration has said."] forms part of a wider plan by EU elites “to replace
an alliance of nations with a federation of states” — a United States of
Europe.

“This is the only logical explanation for millions of people being
transported to Europe from other cultures – as there must be some sort
of explanation for why this is happening now. We cannot consider this to
be an accident,” he added.

“Europe could defend its borders if it wanted to
… what is lacking is not the ability to do so, but the will. And this
lack of will is not unintentional, but the consequence of a definite
underlying attitude that, in a United States of Europe, nations and
their Christian character are more of a drawback than a benefit.”"

Even if Hungarian media is too slanted in one direction, since when is
that the business of the State Department?I say the US media is too
slanted in favour of Hillary, Democrats and far-let beliefs - are you
going to give more money to FOX NEWS and Breitbart in the interest of
balance?Would it be okay if a foreign government (like Russia) gave them money, like say $700,000? No? That would be collusion. right?"... ...........................

"Hungary’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Trade summoned David Kostelancik, charge d’affaires at the United
States’ embassy in Budapest, after the US State Department launched a
media fund for rural media outlets in Hungary, RTL Klub reported.

The 700.000 USD program’s “goal is to support media outlets operating
outside the capital in Hungary to produce fact-based reporting and
increase their audience and economic sustainability.

The program should
increase citizens’ access to objective information about domestic and
global issues of public importance, by enhancing local media’s ability
to engage a larger audience, including their print, multimedia, and
online readership”, according to the State Department’s recent announcement.

Group leader of the ruling Fidesz party, Gergely Gulyas was asked
about the State Department’s plans to support the media in the Hungarian
provinces. He said that it was “an attempt to interfere with Hungary’s
affairs” and added that similar foreign attempts would not be tolerated
by the US political elite,no matter where the money comes from.

Kostelancik was summonedto the ministry in October, following his remarks about the “worrying” state of press freedoms in Hungary."

The Hungarian Foreign Ministry summoned the top American diplomat in
Budapest, chargé d’affaires David Kostelancik, after theU.S. State
Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (DRL) announced
on November 7 that it would provide up to $700,000 “for projects that
increase citizens’ access to objective information about domestic and
global issues in Hungary.”

“DRL’s goal is to support media outlets operating outside the capital
in Hungary to produce fact-based reporting and increase their audience
and economic sustainability,” the State Department wrote on its website....

The Hungarian government, which is a vocal supporter of U.S.
President Donald Trump, has repeatedly claimed that State Department
policies do not represent the White House’s views.